Tony DeGuide, who directed Rooney in the 2012 indie police
thriller “The Voices From Beyond,” said the screen giant had a
“powerful” presence, even in his 90s.

“He’s very dramatic,
he’s very powerful. We’d go over the script and then he would
memorize it, and I just thought it was amazing for a 90-year-old
guy. He just had these instincts, a great sense of beats,”
DeGuide said.

“I was devastated by the news. In my heart I thought that
Mickey would live to be a hundred. He had so much energy. He
didn’t walk with a walker, he didn’t walk with a cane. He wanted
to do everything himself,” he recalled.

Tony DeGuide, who directed Rooney in the 2012 indie police
thriller “The Voices From Beyond,” said the screen giant had a
“powerful” presence, even in his 90s.

“He’s very dramatic,
he’s very powerful. We’d go over the script and then he would
memorize it, and I just thought it was amazing for a 90-year-old
guy. He just had these instincts, a great sense of beats,”
DeGuide said.

“I was devastated by the news. In my heart I thought that
Mickey would live to be a hundred. He had so much energy. He
didn’t walk with a walker, he didn’t walk with a cane. He wanted
to do everything himself,” he recalled.

Tony DeGuide, who directed Rooney in the 2012 indie police
thriller “The Voices From Beyond,” said the screen giant had a
“powerful” presence, even in his 90s.

“He’s very dramatic,
he’s very powerful. We’d go over the script and then he would
memorize it, and I just thought it was amazing for a 90-year-old
guy. He just had these instincts, a great sense of beats,”
DeGuide said.

“I was devastated by the news. In my heart I thought that
Mickey would live to be a hundred. He had so much energy. He
didn’t walk with a walker, he didn’t walk with a cane. He wanted
to do everything himself,” he recalled.

Tony DeGuide, who directed Rooney in the 2012 indie police
thriller “The Voices From Beyond,” said the screen giant had a
“powerful” presence, even in his 90s.

“He’s very dramatic,
he’s very powerful. We’d go over the script and then he would
memorize it, and I just thought it was amazing for a 90-year-old
guy. He just had these instincts, a great sense of beats,”
DeGuide said.

“I was devastated by the news. In my heart I thought that
Mickey would live to be a hundred. He had so much energy. He
didn’t walk with a walker, he didn’t walk with a cane. He wanted
to do everything himself,” he recalled.

Tony DeGuide, who directed Rooney in the 2012 indie police
thriller “The Voices From Beyond,” said the screen giant had a
“powerful” presence, even in his 90s.

“He’s very dramatic,
he’s very powerful. We’d go over the script and then he would
memorize it, and I just thought it was amazing for a 90-year-old
guy. He just had these instincts, a great sense of beats,”
DeGuide said.

“I was devastated by the news. In my heart I thought that
Mickey would live to be a hundred. He had so much energy. He
didn’t walk with a walker, he didn’t walk with a cane. He wanted
to do everything himself,” he recalled.

Tony
DeGuide, who directed Rooney in the 2012 indie police
thriller “The Voices From Beyond,” said the screen giant had
a “powerful” presence, even in his 90s.

“He’s very dramatic, he’s very
powerful. We’d go over the script and then he would memorize
it, and I just thought it was amazing for a 90-year-old guy.
He just had these instincts, a great sense of beats,”
DeGuide said.

“I was devastated by the news. In my
heart I thought that Mickey would live to be a hundred. He
had so much energy. He didn’t walk with a walker, he didn’t
walk with a cane. He wanted to do everything himself,” he
recalled.

Upon Detective O'Hara's admission
of supernatural sightings (Ghosts played
by Robert ZDar, Linnea Quigley) he is
ordered to see a police
psychologist , Dr. Fuller (Jan
Rooney.) To make matters worse, the
authorities form a task force to track a
vigilante who is killing criminals with
long predatory records. Federal Agent
Max Farley (Fred Williamson) thinks
O'Hara's a suspect wants O'Hara off the
task force.
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